Final toxicity results of a radiation-dose escalation study in patients with non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC): predictors for radiation pneumonitis and fibrosis.
Publication/Presentation Date
7-15-2006
Abstract
PURPOSE: We aimed to report the final toxicity results on a radiation-dose escalation trial designed to test a hypothesis that very high doses of radiation could be safely administered to patients with non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) by quantifying the dose-volume toxicity relationship of the lung.
METHODS AND MATERIALS: A total of 109 patients with unresectable or medically inoperable NSCLC were enrolled and treated with radiation-dose escalation (on the basis of predicted normal-lung toxicity) either alone or with neoadjuvant chemotherapy by use of 3D conformal techniques. Eighty-four patients (77%) received more than 69 Gy, the trial was stopped after the dose reached 103 Gy. Estimated median follow-up was 110 months.
RESULTS: There were 17 (14.6%) Grade 2 to 3 pneumonitis and 15 (13.8%) Grade 2 to 3 fibrosis and no Grade 4 to 5 lung toxicity. Multivariate analyses showed them to be (1) not associated with the dose prescribed to the tumor, and (2) significantly (p
CONCLUSIONS: With long-term follow-up for toxicity, we have demonstrated that much higher doses of radiation than are traditionally administered can be safely delivered to a majority of patients with NSCLC. Quantitative lung dose-volume toxicity-based dose escalation can form the basis for individualized high-dose radiation treatment to maximize the therapeutic ratio in these patients.
Volume
65
Issue
4
First Page
1075
Last Page
1086
ISSN
0360-3016
Published In/Presented At
Kong, F. M., Hayman, J. A., Griffith, K. A., Kalemkerian, G. P., Arenberg, D., Lyons, S., Turrisi, A., Lichter, A., Fraass, B., Eisbruch, A., Lawrence, T. S., & Ten Haken, R. K. (2006). Final toxicity results of a radiation-dose escalation study in patients with non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC): predictors for radiation pneumonitis and fibrosis. International journal of radiation oncology, biology, physics, 65(4), 1075–1086. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijrobp.2006.01.051
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
16647222
Department(s)
Department of Medicine
Document Type
Article